PYCA Industries, Inc v. HarCo Wastewater

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 14, 1999
Docket97-60675
StatusPublished

This text of PYCA Industries, Inc v. HarCo Wastewater (PYCA Industries, Inc v. HarCo Wastewater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PYCA Industries, Inc v. HarCo Wastewater, (5th Cir. 1999).

Opinion

Revised July 14, 1999

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 97-60675

PYCA INDUSTRIES, INC., ET AL., Plaintiffs,

PYCA INDUSTRIES, INC., Plaintiff-Appellant,

versus

HARRISON COUNTY WASTE WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT; ET AL., Defendants,

MAX FOOTE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Defendant-Cross Claimant-Appellee-Appellant,

OWEN AND WHITE, INC., Defendant-Cross Defendant-Cross Claimant-Appellee,

HARRISON COUNTY WASTE WATER MANAGEMENT DISTRICT, Defendant-Cross Defendant-Appellee-Appellant.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi

May 27, 1999 Before GARWOOD, BARKSDALE and STEWART, Circuit Judges.

CARL E. STEWART, Circuit Judge: Before the court is a reprise of the travails of the constructi on of Harrison County,

Mississippi’s wastewater treatment facility. We have examined many issues in this case in an earlier

opinion, see PYCA Indus., Inc. v. Harrison County Waste Water Management Dist., 81 F.3d 1412

(5th Cir. 1996) (“PYCA I”), and here are asked to resolve additional disputes between the county and

its contractors. Currently before us is the appeal from a grant of summary judgment in favor of

Harrison County Waste Water Management District (“District”) on the issue of the District’s role in

adjusting the cost of and the time for performance under a contract it had with Max Foote

Construction Company (“Foote”). Execution of the contract required Foote to subcontract wi th

numerous other companies, and one such subcontract, with PYCA Industries, Inc. (“PYCA”), led

to the instant dispute.

The history of this case resides in multiple contract and tort claims among several different

parties arising out of the construction of the $9.27 million West Biloxi Wastewater Treatment Facility

(“Facility”). After several years of litigation and a previous appeal, the status of the case today is that

Foote and PYCA claim that the District violated its contract with Foote, and PYCA claims intentional

interference by Defendant-Appellee Owen & White, Inc. (“O&W”) with PYCA’s contractual

relationships. The district court granted sovereign immunity to O&W as an agent of the Dist ict, r

which this court previously held had sovereign immunity as well, see PYCA I, 81 F.3d 1412, 1419-20

(5th Cir. 1996). The district court also found that the contract claims raised by PYCA and Foote had

not been properly preserved or were otherwise barred. PYCA and Foote (collectively, “Appellants”)

now argue that their rights were preserved in accordance with the contract documents and that

summary judgment was otherwise improvidently granted because material issues of fact exist about

the propriety of certain price adjustments under the contract. The parties also submit that they should

2 have been granted summary judgment on the issue whether the District violated its contract with

them. PYCA also disputes the extension of sovereign immunity to O&W and requests additional

equitable relief.

We begin the opinion with an overview of the factual and procedural background to this case

and a statement regarding the standard of review that we will apply. In Part III, we address Foote’s

claims on appeal; Part IV concerns the District’s cross-claim against Foote. Part V of the opinion

reso lves PYCA’s claims against the District, while Part VI addresses the joint claim of Foote and

PYCA. Finally, in Part VII, we dispose of PYCA’s claim against O&W. For the reasons articulated

below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

I

The instant case involves the remaining claims between the parties in this litigation arising out

of the construction of the Facility.1

A

The District hired Foote on September 27, 1989,2 pursuant to Contract No. 88-1, as the

general contractor for the project.3 The contract designated O&W as the project engineer and the

1 A fuller version of the underlying facts in this case is set out in PYCA I, 81 F.3d at 1414-16. It is worth reiterating that the District was created by the Mississippi state legislature for the purpose of (1) abating the serious pollution of the Mississippi Sound, its tributaries, and other waters in Harrison County through regulations dealing with the discharge of wastewater; and (2) owning, operating, and maintaining all wastewater treatment plants in Harrison County. It was pursuant to that second duty that the District undertook to renovate the Facility. 2 The contract was actually executed on October 16, 1989. 3 The contract included provisions that granted the District the right to direct changes in the contract and provided that any such changes would result in an equitable adjustment to the amount due Foote. In the event an agreement concerning the amount of such an adjustment could not be reached by the parties, the contract provided, in a “Remedies” section, that Foote could pursue a

3 authorized representative of the District. PYCA, an electrical subcontractor, provided a bid to Foote

for the underground wiring and conduit work and the supply and installation of the electrical

equipment at the Facility, and that bid was incorporated by Foote into its own bid to the District.

Foote ultimately secured the general contract. Subsequently, Foote hired PYCA (pursuant to

Subcontract No. 80-16000) for $1.916 million on December 5, 1989 to perform the electrical work

on the project.4 PYCA was bound to Foote under the terms of its subcontract by all the terms and

conditions of the prime contract. After its bid was accepted, in February 1990, PYCA entered into

a purchase order contract with The Reynolds Company (“Reynolds”) for the purchase of all electrical

equipment for the project.5 While the project was ongoing (in July 1990), the District and O&W

negotiated with Foote and PYCA for certain changes in the electrical distribution system, changes

which PYCA and Foote had proposed before the commencement of the project.6 The prime contract

required that a change order be issued to effectuate such changes. Because the District had obtained

federal funding for the project, Foote’s contract and PYCA’s subcontract were subject to certain EPA

claim against the District. 4 PYCA had extensive experience both as an electrical prime contractor and subcontractor. In the eleven years prior to its agreement to perform the electrical work on the Facility, PYCA had performed 246 contracts on primarily public works projects. 5 This purchase order contract was in the amount of $450,000; all of the electrical equipment at issue was manufactured by Siemens Energy & Automation, Inc. (“Siemens”). 6 Prior to executing its subcontract with Foote or entering into the agreement with Reynolds, PYCA and Foote in October 1989 made a valued engineering proposal to O&W and the District in which they proposed design changes in the electrical distribution system which would net the District savings in excess of $300,000. This proposal, formally submitted on November 21, 1989, utilized prices from lower-priced suppliers than Reynolds; the proposal was rejected at first but later accepted (in April 1990).

4 regulations, which, among other things, provided an orderly process for changes in the work. O&W,

under the District’s direction, was responsible for reviewing and approving these change orders.

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